Last yearFinal Ex-Dividend Date30-Mar-2022Final Dividend Payment Date09-May-2022Do anyone know the dividend dates for this year? |
Fill your boots with HMSO !!!Amazing opportunity created by the current crisis!!! |
4.6 million shares bought. They are filling the confers of their mates by taking the shareprice as low as they can get !!! |
4.6 million shares bought. They are filling the confers of their mates !!! |
And sometimes a unit can be unoccupied because the tenant has shut up shop but is unable to find an assignee or sub-tenant to take over. |
Sometimes a unit can be unoccupied but under lease prior to a tenant fitting out/moving in But if there's loads and loads, and landlords have got very cute at covering up voids, then that does tell it's own story |
The stated occupancy rates are mis-stated. I can see a slew of empty units in the Dundrum mall. |
Will be taken over at 50p |
made 50% over last two months someones interested in it |
This stock is dog sh1t |
hopefully a lot of stock has been sold off in anticipation of the scrip distribution landing tomorrow. A number of shareholders I know worked out how many they would receive and sold already since ex date. |
388,170,526 New Shares to be admitted to trading on the London Stock Exchange, Euronext Dublin and the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, which will bring the total number of issued 5 pence ordinary shares in the Company to 5,002,265,607.How is 388,170,526 New Shares going effect the share price on Thursday?Looks like there will be a massive overhang, until these shares are absorbed. massive dilution there.I think the share price will plummet on Thursday. Any thoughts please ?? |
@mountpleasant there is no point embarking on that scheme in the current environment even if they could raise the cash it would be at least 7% and they have the threat of massive construction inflation to contend with. Better to sell it on to someone else. |
Major capex is needed for the city quarters project. How are they going to fund say 500m. |
You get your protection from having senior debt and you use a bit of your return to buy an option to give you some growth upside in the sp |
How does that work William and how is one related to the other? |
Another way of playing HMSO Buy the debt; invest some of the yield in call options Haven't done the maths on this yet; so mightn't make a lot of sense but worth having a think about yet |
Wow HMSO 2028 yielding 10.7 percent SGRO 2029 at 6.4 percent You can take SGRO as being as credit risk free as you can get in the sector That's at least partially the result of pension funds panic selling to cover margin calls |
You can assume they've tried to sell everything From memory, and it could have changed, they don't have a controlling interest in Bicester - which complicated a sale |
jas0701 the monetary dividend is a pathetic 0.2p but the scrip issue better value at 2p and potential for share price gain if you can sell them easily. However, it does mean they are issuing a lot of shares and im guessing thats why they are doing a capital reduction to try and keep number of shares in circulation at a manageable level.
Im not in here too much of a byzantine comapany structure to get your head around although they do have some decent assets like Bicester which they ought to have sold off when values were high to help the rest of the business. |
Can anyone in the know explain Court hearing to confirm the Proposed Capital Reduction please What is HMSO trying to do there?Will it effect share price?Any thoughts on holding shares for the dividend? is it worth it or not. |
From what I'm hearing lenders are being brutal on covenantsWhich makes sense; if a loan is in trouble and the LTV is super high the bank will likely take a loss so may well want to delay that But when a bank has a covenant at 50 or 60 then they are incentivised to get cash from the borrower as they ought to be able to enforce (remember a banker once telling me that 60 was his favourite LTV as meant the market could fall 20 and you could fire sale at a further 20 and get out whole) If the borrower doesn't have the cash then there's plenty of PE funds who do and will step up (at a massive cost) with the funds |